You are right - I didn't include my weather instruments, so it should be "illegal" ! LOL
I do a lot of astrophotography, in fact I have a fine art dual show going on (showing in two cities) next year which will focus on my night-time stuff.
To get images such as the meteors, you actually don't need a telescope, but you do need to know a little physics and math.
Meteors are a sort of point and pray kind of deal, so a wide angle lens helps. This is fortunate as that is part of the secret to get stars to stay put.
The formula is called the rule of 500 (or some use 600). Because the earth rotates, you simply divide your true focal length into the number 500, and that is how many seconds (on a tripod mounted stationary camera) you have before you'll see star trails.
So, if you have a 50mm lens, and a full frame camera, you have 10 seconds of exposure before the stars will trail. For meteors,, wide is good, so I used a 14mm lens on a full frame camera and that gave me 35 seconds of exposure (and I used 30 on this one to be safe). I opened the shutter and got a meteor in that 30 second time frame.
The thing to remember is, if you have a crop sensor camera, like, say a Nikon d300 or d90, you have to multiply that lens by 1.5 - i.e. that 50mm is actually a 75 (50x1.5) and so is only 500/75 seconds worth of exposure, or 6 seconds. This is why micro 4/3rds don't work well for astrophotography, as their 2x crop factor means that 50 is really a 100 - or 5 seconds of exposure - probably not enough time to catch a meteor.
Hope that helps,
Bill
Bill Curry Photography
www.billcurry.ca